fbsdk-ts
Strongly-typed promise-based client library for Facebook's Graph API using TypeScript.
Where do I start?
How to use:
TypeScript is recommended to get all the benefits of this package, but you can also use plain JavaScript.
Step 0: Installing
To install this package in a Node.js project, run this command in the project root:
npm install -S fbsdk-ts
Step 1: Importing
If you are using plain JavaScript, import the FacebookApp
class like so:
const { FacebookApp } = require('fbsdk-ts');
If you are using TypesScript, import the FacebookApp
class like so:
import { FacebookApp } from 'fbsdk-ts';
Step 2: Initialization
FacebookApp
is a class can be initialized like so:
const app = new FacebookApp({
appId: '{YOUR-APP-ID}',
appSecret: '{YOUR-APP-SECRET}',
});
NOTE: Never use your app secret directly in your code, as this is a security risk! Environment variables are recommended for storing your app secret.
Step 3: Reading Nodes and Edges
Once your app is initialized, you can read different nodes on the Nodes
object:
app.Nodes.Page('{SOME-PAGE-ID}')
.read('{PAGE-ACCESS-TOKEN}')
.then((pageInfo) => {
});
A node may or may not also contain Edges
, which will return a collection of nodes related to the root node:
app.Nodes.Page('{SOME-PAGE-ID}')
.Edges.Conversations.read('{PAGE-ACCESS-TOKEN}')
.then((conversations) => {
});
NOTE: As with your app secret, never use your access tokens directly in your code. Environment variables are again recommended for storing your access tokens.
Step 4: Selecting Fields
By default, not all fields on a node are returned when it is read (however, the id
field is always included). To select the fields that should be returned (in addition to id
), you can pass in an array of field keys as the second parameter of the .read
method:
app.Nodes.Page('{SOME-PAGE-ID}')
.read('{PAGE-ACCESS-TOKEN}', ['category', 'followers_count'])
.then((pageInfo) => {
});
If you are using TypeScript, you can limit the fields of the result type by duplicating your fields array as a type parameter on the .read
method:
...
.read<['category', 'followers_count']>('{PAGE-ACCESS-TOKEN}', ['category', 'followers_count'])
...
Step 5: Using Read Parameters
Sometimes, a node or edge may have parameters that can be used with a read operation. These may be passed in as the third parameter in the .read
method (undefined
may be used for the second parameter if you don't want to specify fields):
app.Nodes.Page('{SOME-PAGE-ID}')
.Edges.Conversations.read('{PAGE-ACCESS-TOKEN}', undefined, { folder: 'spam' })
.then((spamConversations) => {
});
How to extend / subclass:
This package is made to be extensible. You can create your own custom class like FacebookApp
with its own methods to suit your needs.
Step 0: Installing
To install this package in a Node.js project, run this command in the project root:
npm install -S fbsdk-ts
Step 1: Importing
If you are using plain JavaScript, import the FacebookAppNoExposedNodes
class like so:
const { FacebookAppNoExposedNodes } = require('fbsdk-ts');
If you are using TypesScript, import the FacebookAppNoExposedNodes
class like so:
import { FacebookAppNoExposedNodes } from 'fbsdk-ts';
Step 2: Sub-classing
FacebookAppNoExposedNodes
is an abstract class, and the parent class of the FacebookApp
class used in the previous examples. Both classes are virtually identical, except that FacebookApp
exposes the nodes object on .Nodes
, while FacebookAppNoExposedNodes
keeps the nodes object on the projected member _Nodes
. If you want to make a subclass that does not expose the nodes object, you can extend FacebookAppNoExposedNodes
:
class FacebookPageGetter extends FacebookAppNoExposedNodes {
public getPageInfo(pageId, accessToken) {
return await this._Nodes.Page(pageId).read(accessToken);
}
}
NOTE: Don't return or expose single node objects as this will expose its edges object. Instead only return the data, and make any member node objects private.
How to add nodes / edges:
NOTE: TypeScript is required for these steps. The instructions assume you're familiar with TypeScript, specifically with interfaces, generic types, and union types.
Step 0: Installation
To install this package in a Node.js project, run this command in the project root:
npm install -S fbsdk-ts
Step 0.5: Creating tsconfig.json
If you haven't already, create a tsconfig.json
file in your project root. It does not have to contain anything, but you may fill it with your preferred configuration options.
Step 1: Importing
Import the FacebookAppBase
class like so:
import { FacebookAppBase } from 'fbsdk-ts';
Step 2: Making an APISpec definition
FacebookAppBase
is an abstract generic class, and requires an APISpec
type parameter. You can declare an interface that extends APISpec
and start defining nodes and their edges:
import { FacebookAppBase } from 'fbsdk-ts';
import { APISpec } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec';
interface CustomAPISpec extends APISpec {
SomeNodeName: {
node: {
type: SomeNode;
};
edges: {
SomeEdge: {
type: EdgeResult;
edge: 'things';
};
};
};
}
These definitions can be further simplified by helper types:
import { FacebookAppBase } from 'fbsdk-ts';
import { APISpec, NodeSpec, EdgeSpec } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec';
interface CustomAPISpec extends APISpec {
SomeNodeName: {
node: NodeSpec<SomeNode>;
edges: {
SomeEdge: EdgeSpec<EdgeResult,'things'>;
};
};
}
If a node doesn't have any edges, its definition can be further shortened with another helper type:
import { FacebookAppBase } from 'fbsdk-ts';
import { APISpec, NodeSpec, EdgeSpec, EdgelessNodeSpec } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec';
interface CustomAPISpec extends APISpec {
SomeNodeName: {
node: NodeSpec<SomeNode>;
edges: {
SomeEdge: EdgeSpec<EdgeResult,'things'>;
};
};
SomeEdgelessNodeName: EdgelessNodeSpec<SomeEdgelessNode>;
}
Nodes and edges can have read parameters defined like so:
import { FacebookAppBase } from 'fbsdk-ts';
import { APISpec, NodeSpec, EdgeSpec, EdgelessNodeSpec } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec';
interface CustomAPISpec extends APISpec {
SomeNodeName: {
node: NodeSpec<SomeNode> & {
read_params: {
additional_token: string;
};
};
edges: {
SomeEdge: EdgeSpec<EdgeResult,'things'> & {
read_params: {
include_specific_kind: boolean;
};
};
};
};
SomeEdgelessNodeName: EdgelessNodeSpec<SomeEdgelessNode>;
}
For more specific code examples, see the v9 APISpec definition. If you want to contribute more nodes/edges to this project, please add onto the type definition in that file.
Step 3: Implementing the definition
Import the Node
and Edge
classes from fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec/node
. Your custom APISpec definition can now be implemented in a subclass of FacebookAppBase
:
import { FacebookAppBase } from 'fbsdk-ts';
import { APISpec, NodeSpec, EdgeSpec, EdgelessNodeSpec, APISpecNodeCollection } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec';
import Node, { Edge } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/api-spec/node';
interface CustomAPISpec extends APISpec {
SomeNodeName: {
node: NodeSpec<SomeNode> & {
read_params: {
additional_token: string;
};
};
edges: {
SomeEdge: EdgeSpec<EdgeResult,'things'> & {
read_params: {
include_specific_kind: boolean;
};
};
};
};
SomeEdgelessNodeName: EdgelessNodeSpec<SomeEdgelessNode>;
}
class CustomFacebookApp extends FacebookAppBase<CustomAPISpec> {
protected _Nodes: APISpecNodeCollection<CustomAPISpec> = {
SomeNodeName: (id: string) =>
new Node(
this.GraphAPI,
{
SomeEdge: new Edge('things', this.GraphAPI, id),
},
id
),
SomeEdgelessNodeName: (id: string) => new Node(this.GraphAPI, {}, id),
};
}
If you want to expose the nodes as a public member variable (as the default FacebookApp
does), you can simply add this inside your class:
...
public Nodes = this._Nodes;
...
This class can also be used as described in how to extend / subclass.
How to access the node types
The nodes can be imported from fbsdk-ts/dist/graph-api/types
like so:
import { Page, User, Conversation } from 'fbsdk-ts/dist/graph-api/types';
Please check the source file for the names of all the currently available types.